Falcon Air Express
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Falcon Air Express | ||
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IATA 6F |
ICAO FAO |
Callsign PANTHER |
Founded | 1995 | |
Fleet size | 2 | |
Destinations | ||
Headquarters | Miami, Florida, USA | |
Key people |
Falcon Air Express was an airline based in Miami, Florida, USA. It operated charter services and wet-leasing of aircraft. Its main base is Miami International Airport[1]. Falcon Air sub-contracts for Venezuelan carrier Aeropostal Alas de Venezuela. Falcon Air also flies for the Department of Defense, universities, tour operators, cruise line groups as well as international carriers like Bahamasair and Cayman Airways.
Although the airline filed for bankruptcy in May 2006, they continue to operate one MD-80 aircraft for Aeropostal.
Contents |
[edit] History
The airline was established in 1995 and started operations in March 1996[1]. It was privately owned and was founded by Emilio Dirube (President and Chief Executive). It was certified as a US domestic airline in 1998, operating the Boeing 727-200 to mostly Caribbean destinations. Now is a FAR part 121 Air Carrier and made domestic and international flights.
On 11 May 2006 Falcon Air Express filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and laid off 73 of its 169 employees. Falcon will now fly with one remaining MD-82 and one MD-83 aircraft. The airline will continue to fly with a reduced fleet as it works to reorganize, said Brian Rich, a bankruptcy lawyer for Berger Singerman, which represents Falcon Air.[citation needed]
[edit] Incidents and accidents
In 1998, the airline was investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration for reports that during a high school charter flight from Oregon to Mexico, crew members allegedly ran a wet T-shirt contest in the aisles and violated various FAA regulations.The airline retrained all crew in proper FAA procedures. {[fact}}
[edit] Fleet
The Falcon Air Express fleet includes the following aircraft (at August 2006) [2]:
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ a b Flight International 3 April 2007
- ^ Flight International, 3-9 October 2006